Musk Manipulates Public – by Steven Jarvis

That is absolutely not true.

This second part also not.

Musk’s PayPal mafia controls most of social media and a large number of tech companies in order to manipulate public perception and profit, while undermining democracy, undermining trust in institutions, and engaging in outright stochastic terror, all while ignoring court-mandated witness testimony.

The corporate media sector also has a strong right-wing or Republican bias. Rupert Murdoch owns the NYPost, WSJ and Fox News. This chart shows that partisanship is more evenly distributed in 2022.

More importantly, the Republican assets in local media are all controlled by the same entity, Sinclair Broadcast Group, which has a very conservative slant that is far right.

Of course, after Sinclair did this, Musk ran with it as evidence that his right-wing friends controlled the media, except he was just lying and blaming the left. The feed Musk started emphasized his intent, via the violent murderous sock account he chose to amplify.

There are two aspects to this MAGA3x murder meme. The earless Wojak memes tie into GamerGate and Chan culture, using a psychologically disturbing image to evoke negative emotions in order to radicalize people. Secondly, the murder of a journalist is used to instill the idea in the minds of its readers to normalize violence against people.

Musk himself has spent the past week advocating for someone to assassinate the current president and vice president, doing so with a thinly veiled “joke” narrative legal defense. He himself has also been more known for posting or amplifying the murder memes and violence that X is intended to instill than he is now — he’s sort of at the low end of the amplification of a repeated cycle of push, easy, push, easy to make the radicalization less conspicuous in order to better normalize political violence.

There is absolutely no room for men like Musk to push for murder, violence, assassination and conspiracies. That is probably why the man deliberately missed his appointment, which feels like a first step towards an indictment.

Musk is somewhat right in this case, but it is misleading, as he himself wants to undermine trust and replace news feeds with his own fake news content.

The above clip irritated me when I was doing research for my book on Trump, Donald Trump Explained, a Special Education Perspective of the Forty-fifth President of the United States, because it was too short and lacked the full context, implying that Trump had disrespectfully thrown away the contents of the box used to feed the koi. In fact, Abe, who was later assassinated, had Trump do just that by throwing away its contents first.

Let’s close with this.

Musk, like his ace Trump, is fond of doing illegal things that governments don’t want him to do. For example, he’s orchestrated a criminal plot to deceive Twitter investors and swindle billions out of them. Tenet’s Tim Pool, Benny Johnson, and Project Veritas are committing crimes by recording and publishing catfished Twitter engineers who’ve been lured on dates.

It’s a felony in California for the recording, and multiple misdemeanors for what he did to investors when he essentially tried to save money on his promised $54.20 per share purchase, which he financed through the Saudis, Emeratis and other MAGA3x financiers.

The answer to Musk’s question about whether what the men and Project Veritas did was legitimate is exactly what you would expect from a grand jury after Musk’s testimony is collected.

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Statement by Dr. the Most Honourable Andrew Holness ON, PC, MP, DLP At the Plenary Session of the UN Future Summit on 22 September 2024 —————————————————————————————————– Mr. President, Jamaica welcomes the convening of the Future Summit. We commend the co-facilitators of the Future Compact, the Declaration on Future Generations and the Global Digital Compact for their hard work. Together, this Summit and the Compact embody renewed hope in advancing a common vision of harnessing multilateralism to create a dynamic framework in which our future generations will thrive. Jamaica is proud to have contributed to this historic process, particularly as a co-facilitator of the Declaration on Future Generations. Mr. President, the Compact rightly reaffirms the importance of achieving the SDGs. The 2023 SDG Summit laid bare the lack of progress in implementing the SDGs, including the reality that small island developing States are particularly far off from meeting them. With many still recovering from the pandemic, the heart of the challenge, and one that must be addressed urgently, lies in the glaring SDG financing gap of $2.5-4 trillion annually. As the Compact affirms, we must redouble our efforts to tackle global poverty, income inequality and food insecurity; we have a duty to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels; and we must create a future that promotes peaceful societies and ensures debt sustainability, resilience to climate shocks, infrastructure development, quality health and education systems, full respect for human rights, the empowerment of women and girls AND an enabling environment that makes international trade and the economy work towards sustainable development. I wish to emphasise that these are all priority areas in Jamaica’s National Development Plan-Vision 2030. Mr President, we are facing unprecedented challenges to international peace and security, driven primarily by geopolitical motives, but increasingly by transnational organised crime networks. These challenges go to the heart of the UN Charter. The Compact provides a realistic framework within which we can all live together in peace and harmony, within and between countries, and transmit the nature of such coexistence to our future generations. It is therefore well aligned with and supportive of the Secretary-General’s Agenda for Peace. We welcome the Compact’s focus on the importance of science, innovation and technological advancement, including digitalisation. Admittedly, new technologies, such as artificial intelligence and robotics, create new challenges to security and some livelihoods. However, they also create important opportunities, particularly for young people; and have great potential to empower generations, transform economies and solve complex challenges. The potential is, in fact, so great that we must emphasize the importance of international cooperation to address the challenges and seize the opportunities, particularly for the benefit of people in developing countries. I must stress that reforms in our international systems are needed to better meet the needs of today’s world. In particular, I agree with the Secretary-General that “the international financial system is outdated, dysfunctional and unjust.” Moreover, the UN Security Council must be more representative, inclusive and effective in a changing global security landscape. As a small island developing state, the Compact presents a path to turbocharging SDG implementation, addressing the impact of and tackling the root causes of climate change, and setting the framework for making global governance fairer, more equitable and more inclusive. Fellow facilitators, the world is counting on us to use this Summit to nurture renewed hope for the future, lay a suitable foundation for the prosperity of our descendants, and take bold steps to make this a reality. We must seize this opportunity! Thank you!